neuroplasticity - efpta · 4/29/2012  · neuroplasticity includes several different processes that...

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The human brain and change

IB DP Psychology 2011/BLOA

NEUROPLASTICITY

4 Facts About Neuroplasticity

• 1. Neuroplasticity includes several different processes that take place throughout a lifetime. Many types of brain cells are involved in neuroplasticity, including neurons, glia, and vascular cells.

• 2. Neuroplasticity has a clear age-dependent determinant. Your brain changes at all ages, but different kinds of changes are relevant at different ages.

4 Facts About Neuroplasticity • FACT 3: Neuroplasticity occurs in the brain under two primary

conditions:

• 1. During normal brain development when the immature brain first begins to process sensory information through adulthood (developmental plasticity and plasticity of learning and memory).

• 2. As an adaptive mechanism to compensate for lost function and/or to maximize remaining functions in the event of brain injury.

4 Facts About Neuroplasticity • FACT 4: The environment plays a key role in influencing plasticity.

• In addition to genetic factors, the brain is shaped by the characteristics of a person's environment and by the actions of that same person.

Developmental Plasticity: Synaptic Pruning

• Gopnick et al. (1999) describe neurons as growing telephone wires that communicate with one another.

• This process is called dendritic branching.

• Following birth, the brain of a newborn is flooded with information from the baby’s sense organs.

• We are born with a fixed number of neurons – the brain’s growth is caused by these neurons forming more connections

• At birth, each neuron in the cerebral cortex has approximately 2,500 synapses. By the time an infant is two or three years old, the number of synapses is approximately 15,000 synapses per neuron (Gopnick, et al., 1999).

Synaptic Pruning• The average adult neuron has about 8000 synaptic connections.

• Yes, as adults we have fewer connections

• As we age, old connections are deleted through a process called synaptic pruning.

Why must synapses be pruned?• Synaptic pruning eliminates weaker synaptic contacts while

stronger connections are kept and strengthened.

• Experience/learning determines which connections will be strengthened and which will be pruned.

• Connections that have been activated most frequently are preserved.

• Neurons must have a purpose to survive. Without a purpose, neurons die through a process called apoptosis (pronounced ‘apotosis’)

• It is plasticity that enables the brain to adapt itself to its environment.

Learning is plasticity!• The capacity of the brain to change with learning is plasticity.

• According to Durbach (2000), there appear to be at least two types of modifications that occur in the brain with learning:

1) A change in the internal structure of the neurons, the most notable being in the area of synapses.

2) An increase in the number of synapses between neurons.

What about Jodie who had a right hemispherectomy?• Injury-induced Plasticity/Plasticity and Brain Repair

• During brain repair following injury, plastic changes maximize function in spite of the damaged brain.

• In studies involving rats in which one area of the brain was damaged, brain cells surrounding the damaged area underwent changes in their function and shape that allowed them to take on the functions of the damaged cells.

• Similar (thought not quite as effective) changes occur in human brains following injury.

• Jodie is a child, which helps her case, but even in adults, the brainhas an amazing ability to repair itself

Some illustrations of plasticity

Some illustrationsSynaptic apoptosis

Lesson Plan

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